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Exp Posted 19 years ago
Vocabulary

What is "stories with a sequence"

What does the "sequence" mean in this sentence?: "http://www.earlychildhoodnews.com/earlychildhood/article_view.aspx?ArticleID=536" ("Stories" are children's books). What is this sequence of?
  

Top answer

I guess it means stories which doesn't end in one book but have series.

  • I guess it means stories which doesn't end in one book but have series.
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7 Answers
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I guess it means stories which doesn't end in one book but have series.
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I think these are stories structured with repeating rhythmic and sound patterns. These help children predict how words will sound once they get used to a certain pattern. And in the long run, they will also learn the idea of how to tell a chronological story.

The robber was hit with a bat.
The robber was missing his hat.
The piggy-bank fell to the mat.
The little boy ran in
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ArvsworldI think these are stories structured with repeating rhythmic and sound patterns. These help children predict how words will sound once they get used to a certain pattern. And in the long run, they will also learn the idea of how to tell a chronological story. The robber was hit with a bat. The robber was missing his hat. The piggy-bank fell to the mat. Th
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It depends on the person who wrote the phrase and his intent. Would you be able to show me the entire paragraph that contains this phrase? This way, we will be better equipped to deduce wether or not the phrase is "specialized jargon."

Maybe someone more familiar with this kind of learning tool can jump in and clarify?
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It depends on the person who wrote the phrase and his intent. Would you be able to show me the entire paragraph that contains this phrase? This way, we will be better equipped to deduce wether or not the phrase is "specialized jargon."

Maybe someone more familiar with this kind of learning tool can jump in and clarify?
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ArvsworldIt depends on the person who wrote the phrase and his intent. Would you be able to show me the entire paragraph that contains this phrase? This way, we will be better equipped to deduce wether or not the phrase is "specialized jargon." Maybe someone more familiar with this kind of learning tool can jump in and clarify?
The sentence quoted in my f
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I can only guess it means a story in which things happen - a real story, not " a yellow ducky" "a red apple" etc.

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